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Bowlers, Klaasen and van der Dussen complete England rout

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Marco Jansen was the pick of the bowlers. He took 3 for 39. [Cricbuzz]

South Africa comfortably completed a thorough thrashing of an out-of-sorts England with a seven-wicket victory in Karachi, heading to the semis in style. They’d locked in their spot in the top-four by the halfway stage after bundling out England for just 179. Heinrich Klaasen made a seamless return to the side after missing the tournament opener through injury, notching up his fifth successive half-century in the format. Rassie van der Dussen scored his fifty too, and added 127 runs for the third wicket with Klaasen before wrapping up the game in the 30th over.

The England bowlers started slightly better than their batters as Jofra Archer struck twice in the PowerPlay. Tristan Stubbs fell for a five-ball duck in his first-ever opening gig in professional cricket when he played a ball onto his stumps in the third over. Saqib Mahmood then offered Ryan Rickleton a reprieve but Archer ensured that didn’t matter as he knocked back the stumps of the other opener in the ninth over. But England struggled to break through any further as van der Dussen and Klaasen put their side comfortably on course to surmount the small target ahead of them.

Jos Buttler tried throwing everything at the pair in search of a wicket. One of England’s best bowlers – Adil Rashid – tried in vain from both ends to break the partnership. Buttler even brought back Archer for his eighth over, in just the 21st of the innings. Klaasen back foot-punched the quick twice to mark his first game of the tournament with a 41-ball 50. By the halfway of the chase, van der Dussen brought up his fifty. With just six to get, Rashid ended the partnership with the wicket of Klaasen but David Miller sealed the chase with a straight six in the 30th over.

This humbling end to England’s woeful Champions Trophy campaign originated in the first half, when Buttler chose to bat in the hope of repeating what South Africa did to Afghanistan at the venue. What transpired though was disappointingly contrasting for his side. Marco Jansen sent the trio of Phil Salt, Jamie Smith and Ben Duckett packing by the seventh over. A 62-run partnership between Joe Root and Harry Brook turned out to be the best England could offer, as their downward spiral hastened once Keshav Maharaj dismissed Brook, through a sensational catch from Jansen.

Root, who started well, was then cleaned up by Wiaan Mulder, while Maharaj lured Liam Livingstone out of his crease to have him stumped. Jos Buttler and Jofra Archer showed a modicum of resistance in a 42-run stand but that barely moved the needle for England. Mulder dismissed the latter and finished with figures of 3-25 in 7.2 overs as England folded in the 39th over. Any hopes that Archer kindled with his opening spell were clinically crushed by the South African batters as the chase was wrapped up with 125 balls to spare.

Brief Scores:
England 179 in 38.2 overs (Joe Root 37; Wiaan Mulder 3-25, Marco Jansen 3-39, Keshav Maharaj 2-35) lost to South Africa 181/3 in 29.1 overs (Rassie van der Dussen 72*, Heinrich Klaasen 64; Jofra Archer 2-55) by 7 wickets



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Zimbabwe opt to bowl, include Maposa; Samson, Axar back for India

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Axar Patel and Sanju Samson were back for Washington Sundar and Rinku Singh [Cricinfo]

Zimbabwe won the toss and asked India to bat first in what was practically a must-win match for both sides. Thanks to South Africa’s win over Weszt Indies minutes before the toss, India now need to just win. Zimbabwe, though, need to win big.

Sikandar Raza, the Zimbabwe captain, said there was grass and moisture on the surface, and that he wanted his seamers to use it early. Raza didn’t even go for an X-ray on his injured hand lest it show a fracture and force him out of the big match.

Thanks to Raza’s call to field, we were to soon find out the batting position of SanjunSamson, whose inclusion brought about a huge cheer from the stands in Chennai, which will now be his home during the IPL. A Chennai boy, though, went out. Washington Sundar made way for the vice-captain Axar Patel, who had been left out for tactical reasons against South Africa.

Samson replaced a lower middle-order hitter Rinku Singh, who might or might not have his mind on other things. He made a quick visit to Delhi with his ailing father before rejoining the squad on the eve of this match. How Samson would fit in the batting was intriguing, but one thing was made clear: he was going to take the big gloves behind the wicket later in the night.

Zimbabwe made one change to go with their reading of the conditions. Legspinner Graeme Cremer went out for fast bowler  Tinotenda Maposa.

India:  Abhishek Sharma,  Sanju Samson (wk),  Ishan Kishan,  Suryakumar Yadav (capt.),  Tilak Varma,  Hardik Pandya,  Shivam Dube,  Axar Patel,  Arshdeep Singh,  Varun Chakravarthy,  Jasprit Bumrah

Zimbabwe:  Tadiwanashe Marumani (wk),  Brian Bennett,  Dion Myers,  Ryan Burl,  Sikandar Raza (capt.),  Tony Munyonga,  Tashinga Musekiwa,  Brad Evans,  Tinotenda Maposa,  Blessing Muzarabani,  Richard Ngarava

[Cricinfo]

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Markram, bowlers lead South Africa’s rout of West Indies

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Aiden Markram dominated the run-chase [Cricinfo]

Aiden Markram’s 82 not out led South Africa to a nine wicket victory over West Indies that, while not confirming his side’s semi-final place just yet, underlined why many believe the Proteas could finally lift the T20 World Cup. In this meeting of the last two unbeaten sides at this tournament, South Africa were ruthless, maintaining their 100 per cent record with 23 balls to spare.

Markram’s third half-century of the tournament – his 22nd fifty-plus score in T20Is – made light work of a 177 chase. He and Quinton de Kock put on 95, their highest opening stand of the tournament, skewering whatever belief West Indies had picked up at the back end of a first innings that started disastrously.

Inserted on a tacky-looking Ahmedabad surface, West Indies were 83 for 7 in the 11th over, before a record T20I stand of 89 for the eighth wicket between Jason Holder and Romario Shepherd.

Lungi Ngidi (3 for 30) and Kagiso Rabada’s (2 for 22) were the chief architects of the early stages of that collapse, with Corbin Bosch (2 for 31) also chiming in, profiting from batters’ unrelenting pursuit of boundaries.

Shepherd’s unbeaten 52 – a maiden T20I half-century, sealed with an inside edge for four off the final ball of the innings – and a well-managed 49 from Holder was a part change of tact. But even they focused on finding the fence throughout their 57 deliveries together rather than ticking over to bat time, even if West Indies were able to use all 20 overs.

South Africa were far from perfect, dropping four catches and being a little passive in the field. But they took it to West Indies’s bowlers. All six used by Shai Hope ended up wearing economy rates in double figures, as de Kock’s 47 off 24) and then Ryan Rickleton’s unbeaten 45 off 28 dovetailed neatly as left-handed foils to Markram’s belligerent march to the finish line.

[Cricinfo]

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Maharoof expects ‘some hard decisions’ after Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup exit

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Matt Henry got rid of Pathum Nissanka with a beauty first up [Cricinfo]

“I’m going to put it very simple: it’s hurtful, it’s painful and it’s shameful,” Farveez Mahroof,  the former Sri Lanka allrounder, said, pretty much summing up the mood among cricket fans in the island after their abject failure against New Zealand on Wednesday in Colombo. That it came after being bowled out for 95 by England and meant Sri Lanka’s T 20 World Cup 2026 was over just added to the sense of dejection.

“It’s not a pitch that you can play through the line, I get it. But the way some of the batters just gifted their wickets away, apart from Pathum Nissanka’s delivery [from Matt Henry], every other dismissal was a soft dismissal, giving the wickets away, just like the England game, where all ten were soft dismissals,” Maharoof said on ESPN Cricinfo TimeOut after the match. “Continuing the same trend into another game, a must-win game, shows Sri Lanka were not up to the mark with the bat.”

Nissanka has been Sri Lanka’s best batter in the tournament, and the main man in their win over Australia, when he slammed a 52-ball 100 not out. On Wednesday, Henry produced a peach to Nissanka first ball, and “whatever hopes that Sri Lanka had just vanished”.

At the T20 World Cup, which Sri Lanka came to after losing 3-0 to England in a series at home, they beat Oman and Ireland, teams ranked lower than them, and then Australia in the group stage, but since then, it has all been downhill. Zimbabwe,  England and now New Zealand have beaten Sri Lanka, and the last two have come after poor batting performances.

“It’s becoming a bad habit to have. I have been doing this analysis for seven-eight years, I keep saying the same old thing: once in a while, a good game, and our hopes are high; all of a sudden, come crashing down to the earth,” Maharoof said, referring to the Australia game. “It’s not the first time. I just hope something down the line, this has to come to an end, some hard decisions have to be made.

“I think after the next game, before the next series starts, Sri Lanka’s selectors and the think tank should really think of the future, what are the capabilities of the players, who should stick and who should not stick, and move on. I expect probably in the next couple of weeks, some hard decisions are going to be made. If not, I will be very surprised.”

Sri Lanka end their campaign with a game against Pakistan, in Pallekele on February 28.

[Cricinfo]

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